Collapsed Retail Paradise
By James Quinn,
a certified public accountant
and a certified cash manager
TheBurningPlatform.com
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There's a lady who's sure
All that glitters is gold
And she's buying a stairway to heaven
When she gets there she knows
If the stores are all closed
With a word she can get what she came for
Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh
And she's buying a stairway to heaven
Led Zeppelin – Stairway to Heaven
She
was buying the stairway to heaven using her home equity line, but
now that she is underwater on her mortgage she tried to pay using
her Amex card, but her credit score had dropped to 600 and they
cut her credit line in half. The stairway to heaven isn’t as easy
to achieve as it used to be. Barney Frank and Nancy Pelosi feel
bad for the lady. They are going to borrow against your children’s
future tax dollars and give them to the lady, so she can buy that
stairway to heaven. By making this deal with the devil, the corrupt
politicians running this country have put us on an escalator to
hell. A straight shooting blunt President from last century described
what would destroy America.
“The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price,
peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love
of soft living, and the get rich quick theory of life.”
Theodore Roosevelt
Over the last 30 years Americans have learned to love soft living
and fallen for the lie of prosperity at any price. In the last 10
years a significant number of delusional citizens have tested the
get rich quick theory of life, twice. First, the internet bubble
lured millions to believe that Pets.com was going to change the
world and day trading was a road to riches. Once this bubble collapsed
and wiped out millions of morons we moved onto the next bubble.
Millions of Americans bought into the “fact” that home prices only
go up. The National Association of Realtors dealt the propaganda
that now was the best time to buy. Alan Greenspan provided the fuel
with 1% interest rates and recommending ARMs for everyone. Banks
and mortgage brokers provided the mortgage products that would allow
someone with annual income of $25,000 to “buy” a $400,000 home.
George Bush and Congress stood on the sidelines cheering everyone
on. The get rich quick portion of our population (10% to 20%) began
to buy multiple houses and flipping them before the ink was dry
on the closing papers. Home prices doubled in many places in the
space of a few years. This lured a vast amount of the population
to borrow against the ever increasing value of their homes. Everyone
knew that home prices never fall.
Well on his way, his head in a cloud,
The man of a thousand voices, talking perfectly loud.
But nobody ever hears him,
Or the sound he appears to make.
And he never seems to notice .....
But the fool on the hill
Sees the sun going down.
And the eyes in his head,
See the world spinning around.
The Beatles – Fool on the Hill
During the period of 2000 through 2008, I felt like
the fool on the hill. I never bought an internet stock and couldn’t
understand how people were getting rich buying and selling these
stocks. I didn’t flip any condos, didn’t borrow against the equity
of the house I’ve lived in since 1995, or buy a new BMW. None of
the hype and enthusiasm made any sense to me, so I sat on the hill
and watched the sun going down. Instead of having the satisfaction
of making the right choices, my government is telling me that I
should have joined the party. They are taking my money and handing
it to the people who made wrong choices. Corrupted politicians,
government bureaucrats and lying financial pundits are breathlessly
awaiting the return of irrational exuberance. They believe that
the American consumer just needs a little confidence to resume their
rightful place in the world economic pyramid. I hate to be a wet
blanket, but the American consumer isn’t coming back and the consequences
of this fact have yet to be realized by the financial markets, foreign
manufacturers, domestic retailers or politicians. The overhang of
debt, continued home price depreciation, lack of savings, and aging
of America will change the face of retailing for decades.
Why Worry?
The Consumer Confidence Index in February was 25, the lowest since
the index inception in 1967. During the Dot.com bubble it reached
an irrationally exuberant 140. It hovered in the 110 level through
the housing bubble until late 2007. The good news is that it can’t
go below zero. The CNBC pundits and Washington politicians think
that Americans just need to get their confidence back and everything
will be OK. There’s only one problem. You can’t spend confidence.
The index shows how fragile the psyches of Americans can be. In
retrospect, the extreme confidence in early 2000 and high levels
from 2004 through 2007 were completely unwarranted. The American
public had a false sense of confidence inflated by our bubble economy.
Now the confidence level is at a record low level. This level is
rational. With the government reported unemployment rate of 7.6%
and the true rate between 14% and 18%, consumers aren’t too confident.
There are 235 million Americans of working age. Only 154 million
are in the work force according to government statistics. Of those,
11.6 million are unemployed. There are 81 million Americans of working
age who are not in the workforce. At least 10 million of these people
would work if they had an opportunity. With the massive destruction
of wealth in the last two years, many more of the 81 million will
have to go back into the workforce, whether they like it or not.
The Long and Unwinding Road
The country has tried to spend its way to prosperity over the last
three decades. Total consumer debt is just under $2.6 trillion,
or $23,600 per household. This includes credit card debt, auto loans,
and personal loans. There are approximately 170 million credit card
holders who own 1.5 billion cards, or 9 cards per person. The average
household carries nearly $8,700 in credit card debt. The average
new car loan is $25,000 with a loan to value ratio of 93%. This
means that the average new car owner is underwater on their loan
as soon as they pull out of the dealership parking lot.
The credit card wasn’t invented until 1967. Americans have adapted
quite well to this new fangled American invention. Since 1970 revolving
credit debt has increased by 26,000%, from $3.7 billion to $963.5
billion. Over this same time frame GDP grew by 1,430%. These statistics
prove to me that America has maintained its standard of living by
using credit cards. The always loquacious Alan Greenspan concluded
in 2005 that the geniuses at Citicorp, Bank of America, Capital
One, among others had done a wonderful service to humanity by giving
credit cards to people who could not pay them back. I can picture
his hang dog jowls quivering while tears welled up in his lying
eyes.
"As we reflect on the evolution of consumer credit in the
United States, we must conclude that innovation and structural change
in the financial services industry have been critical in providing
expanded access to credit for the vast majority of consumers, including
those of limited means. Without these forces, it would have been
impossible for lower-income consumers to have the degree of access
to credit markets that they now have. This fact underscores the
importance of our roles as policymakers, researchers, bankers, and
consumer advocates in fostering constructive innovation that is
both responsive to market demand and beneficial to consumers."
Only 23% of the credit cards in the country are in the hands of
prime borrowers. Giving out credit cards like candy to people of
limited means couldn’t possibly end badly. The MBA Wall Street geniuses
gazed at their models and concluded that their million dollar bonuses
were in the bag. According to Fitch, write-offs are breaching 8%
and are headed towards 10%. Auto loan delinquencies are already
at 10%. Maybe lending 120% of the value of those Cadillac Escalades
to a person with no job or assets was a bad idea.
The worst recession since the Great Depression will lead to the
unprecedented credit card write-offs. Guess who will step to the
plate and cover these losses. Right again. You and I will pay for
the noble experiment of giving credit cards to people with little
or no income. The bank CEO’s walked away with hundreds of millions
in pay, Congressmen who pushed for poor people to get the credit
were re-elected, Alan Greenspan receives $150,000 per speaking engagement,
and the U.S. taxpayer gets screwed.
Anyone
who thinks the U.S. consumer is close to resuming their spending
habits should look at the chart below. Consumer credit outstanding
as a % of GDP ranged between 12% and 14% from 1965 through 1995.
It currently stands at 18%, with GDP in freefall. With GDP at $14
trillion, the American consumer will have to shed $600 billion of
debt to achieve a 14% level. It will take years of debt reduction
and GDP growth to rebalance the economy. The brilliant bank analyst
Meredith Whitney lays out our bleak future:
I estimate that the mortgage market will shrink for the first
time in US history and that the credit card market will
be 18 months behind it. While just over 70 per cent of
US households have access to credit cards, 90 per cent of these
people use credit cards as a cash-flow management vehicle, or revolve
payments at least once a year. While the credit card market is small
relative to the mortgage market, it has grown to play a key role
in consumer liquidity. Declining liquidity here will have disastrous
effects on consumer spending and the economy.
It is time to take the advice of John Lennon and stop riding on
the merry-go-round of a materialistic society that tries to borrow
and spend its way to prosperity.
People say I'm crazy doing what I'm doing
Well they give me all kinds of warnings to save me from ruin
When I say that I'm o.k. well they look at me kind of strange
Surely you're not happy now you no longer play the game
I'm just sitting here watching the wheels go round and round,
I really love to watch them roll,
No longer riding on the merry-go-round,
I just had to let it go.
John Lennon - Watching the Wheels
Home Sweet Home Equity
“Consumption doesn't drive an economy - entrepreneurship does that
- while savings fuel it.”
Gerard Jackson
U.S. households accumulated an additional $8 trillion in debt over
the past decade. As their home values rose relentlessly, it became
passé to save for retirement. Old age would be funded from vast
amounts of housing wealth. This made Americans less interested in
saving their money as the chart below shows. At the height of housing
mania, the savings rate went negative. The dream of a retirement
financed by housing wealth has since been shattered.
“Now remember, when things look bad and it looks like you're
not gonna make it, then you got to get mean. I mean plumb, mad-dog
mean! Cause if you lose your head and you give up, then you neither
live nor win. That's just the way it is.”
Clint Eastwood in Outlaw Josey Wales
Things do look bad and Americans need to get mad-dog mean. The
meanness that I’ve witnessed so far has been from 35 year old jerks
driving leased BMW 525i’s who have 3 underwater condos and have
lost 70% of their faux wealth in the market. They’re the ones who
come up behind you at 90 mph, lock onto your bumper and flash their
brights at you to get out of their way. I slow down.
Average Americans need to get mean about spending and saving. Between
2002 and 2008, Americans sucked over $3 trillion of equity out of
their houses and spent it on gadgets and goodies. That well is dry.
There are no more wells. Ignore the crap you are hearing from Paul
Krugman about the paradox of thrift. You must become thrifty because
you have no choice. The future is approaching at hyper-speed and
Americans have saved little. Their choice is to save now or acquire
a taste for dog food. The saving rate in January jumped to 5%, the
highest level since 1995. This trend will continue up to 10% in
the coming years.
For decades homeowners had a ridiculous notion that they should
slowly but surely pay off their mortgages. Why pay off your mortgage
when your home value is guaranteed to increase 10% per year for
infinity? After the greatest housing boom in history Americans are
left with 45% equity in their homes versus 68% in 1985. With home
prices destined to fall another 20% to 30%, equity will fall to
35%. One in seven homeowners across the country has negative equity,
and of homeowners who bought in the last five years, 29.5% are under
water.
Reversion to the mean is a concept that government bureaucrats
refuse to accept. They are willing to spend as much of your money
as they can get their grubby little hands on to reverse a non-reversible
trend. Home prices must fall another 30% to reach the long term
mean value. Taking money from prudent homeowners giving it to deadbeat
homeowners and allowing politically motivated judges to decide who
deserves a lower mortgage will not reverse the downward trajectory
of home prices. It will just prolong the pain and create unintended
consequences.
The number of homes for sale is still at record levels. With foreclosures
accelerating more houses will come onto the market and prices will
fall. Unemployment will reach 10% in the next year. There are 2.1
million vacant homes in the U.S. today. This is 1 million more than
the historical trend. No one is going to buy these homes at the
current asking prices. If you wait until foreclosure, you may get
a house 50% cheaper than today’s asking price. This is a rational
approach and will lead to lower prices.
A normalized level of homes for sale would be in the range of 2
million. There is 9.5 months supply of homes for sale. A normalized
level would be 4 months.
All the facts point to a significant further decline in home prices.
Barney Frank’s efforts to mitigate foreclosures and prop up home
prices with our tax dollars will fail. With prices falling for another
two years and jobs disappearing at 500,000 per month, consumers
will stay on the sidelines for years.
Dude, Where’s My Retirement?
At the end of 2007 the average 401k balance was $65,500. The median
401k balance was $19,000. This divergence shows there are a few
people with huge 401k balances, while the majority has virtually
no retirement savings. These balances were at the end of 2007. Balances
are likely to be 40% lower today. Almost 20% of 401k participants
had borrowed against their 401k at the end of 2007, with an average
loan balance of $7,500. With plunging markets and home prices, the
number of loans probably soared in 2008. A 45 year old couple with
an $11,000 401k balance and an entire net worth of $110,000 and
annual income of $62,000 is in a precarious position. They would
have to be living in complete denial if they think they will have
a comfortable retirement.
Americans bought into the lie that their homes could fund a glorious
retirement of cruises, golf, and travelling the world. That illusion
has been shattered. It will likely take 10 years to get back to
breakeven on the losses they’ve experienced in the last 18 months.
Anyone who has retired in the last five years or has plans to retire
in the next five years has had their plans upended. They will have
to go back to work or work longer, if they can find a job. There
are 1,000 Americans per day turning 65. Only an insane person, after
experiencing the losses of the last few years, would continue to
spend on electric gadgets and luxury cars. If they don’t start to
save at a rapid clip, they will experience a miserable stress filled
old age.
Deleveraging and How I Learned to Love It
Men, all this stuff you've heard about America not wanting
to fight, wanting to stay out of the war, is a lot of horse dung.
Americans traditionally love to fight. All real Americans love the
sting of battle. When you were kids, you all admired the champion
marble shooter, the fastest runner, big league ball players, the
toughest boxers. Americans love a winner and will not tolerate a
loser. Americans play to win all the time. I wouldn't give a hoot
in hell for a man who lost and laughed. That's why Americans have
never lost, and will never lose a war... because the very thought
of losing is hateful to Americans.
George C. Scott – Patton
Americans have gotten soft over the last few decades. It is time
to fight and prove that we still have a backbone. The next decade
will not be pleasant, but it will build character. The priorities
of the country must be changed and it will be American consumers
who will force the change. They have already begun the long trek
back from a losing spending strategy to a saving strategy that could
result in being a winner. The drop in retail sales in the last few
months is the most dramatic in U.S. history. This is not a momentary
blip in a long term uptrend. This is a paradigm shift.
From 1952 through 1982, consumer spending as a percentage of our
economy ranged between 60% and 64%. The United States ran trade
surpluses and manufactured things that other countries wanted. Since
1982 we’ve lived above our means, consumed 4% more per year than
we produced, and borrowed the money from foreigners to live this
way. In 2008, this ratio topped out at close to 71%, or $10 trillion
of our $14 trillion economy. Since this was an unsustainable trend
it will revert to the mean over the next decade. The reversion to
62% of GDP will reduce consumer spending by $1.3 trillion annually
going forward.
To paraphrase famous American admiral John Paul Jones, we’ve only
just begun to de-lever. When you accumulate debt over three decades,
you don’t get rid of it in two years. Multi-decade expansions of
debt are followed by a multi-decade deleveraging. The last time
consumers pulled back for longer than one month was 1975. The consumer
is in the process of collapsing. There will be false starts in a
positive direction, but the overhang of consumer debt, relentless
decrease in housing and stock values, and looming retirement funding
will force Americans to dramatically cut their spending for decades.
The retail industry will be devastated by this paradigm shift.
Knock, Knock, Knockin on Heaven’s Door
The managements of most retailers in the United States are not
prepared for $1.3 trillion less consumer spending per year. Their
little expansion models were built upon an existing over inflated
demand extrapolated at 5% or greater growth for eternity. We know
how well bank models worked out. The good news is that retailer
expansion models will not bring down the financial system. The bad
news is that thousands of retailers will go bankrupt because they
planned their businesses based upon false assumptions. Any retailer
that used leverage to expand based on faulty pie in the sky assumptions
is headed to retail heaven.
Retail top management is notorious for copying the strategy of
other successful retailers. Wal-Mart created the concentration strategy
of dominating a market with multiple stores. Every retailer in America
dreamed of replicating Wal-Mart’s success. Home Depot, Bed, Bath
& Beyond, Target, Lowes, among others have followed this same
strategy. Every retailer does the same thing. They know how many
households are in a market and they multiply that number by the
expected spending per household. There are three major errors that
have been committed by every retailer in America. They failed to
recognize that the spending per household was 30% over inflated
due to debt financed demand. They then extrapolated the spending
per household using a 5% to 10% growth rate. Lastly, they ignored
the fact that their competitors had the same strategy.
I consider Lowes to be one of the best run retailers in the U.S.,
with beautiful stores and good service. But, their top management
was clearly irrationally exuberant regarding their expansion plans.
Lowes has annual sales of $45 billion with approximately 1,500 stores.
This averages out to $30 million of annual sales per store. Their
operating margin has been 10%. They opened a store in Plymouth Meeting,
20 minutes south of my home. Since it was the 1st store in the market,
it likely generated annual sales of $40 million with a $4 million
profit. Next they opened a store in Montgomeryville, 20 minutes
northeast of my home. This store likely generated $30 million in
sales, while reducing the sales of the Plymouth Meeting store by
15%. Next they opened a store in Oaks, 20 minutes west of my home.
This store likely generated $25 million in sales, while reducing
the sales of the Plymouth Meeting store by 10% and the Montgomeryville
store by 10%. Now for the final nail in the coffin. They will open
a 4th store in Hatfield, 5 minutes from my home in April. It will
cannibalize the sales of all three other stores. Below is an analysis
of the likely profit implications for Lowes. 000’s Omitted
|
Starting |
Can-nibal |
Can-nibal |
Can-nibal |
Current |
Profit |
Annual |
Store |
Annual Sales |
2nd Store |
3rd Store |
4th Store |
Annual Sales |
Margin |
Profit |
Plymouth Meeting * |
$40,000 |
15.0% |
10.0% |
10.0% |
$28,350 |
6.0% |
$1,652 |
Montgomeryville ** |
$30,000 |
|
10.0% |
20.0% |
$21,600 |
4.0% |
$864 |
Oaks *** |
$25,000 |
|
|
10.0% |
$22,500 |
5.0% |
$1,125 |
Hatfield |
$20,000 |
|
|
|
$20,000 |
3.0% |
$600 |
Totals |
|
|
|
|
$92,450 |
|
$4,241 |
* One store had a profit of $4.0 mil.
** Two stores had a profit of $5.5 mil.
*** Three stores had a profit of $5.3 mil.
This chart shows that Lowes likely generated more annual profit
with two stores than with four stores. These figures don’t take
into account that Lowes likely spent $20 million to build each of
those stores. They have sunk $40 million into building the 3rd and
4th stores, while reducing annual profits. These figures have also
not taken into account the future reduction in consumer spending.
If Lowes has replicated this error across the country, their future
will not be bright. The hubris and overconfidence of top retail
executives will result in thousands of store closings and retail
layoffs.
I have experienced the incompetence and shortsightedness of retail
executives firsthand. It is amazing to me that supposedly intelligent
executives could gamble with a $100 million investment based on
ridiculous assumptions and blatant lies. Many retailers have a winning
concept, but few have top executives who do not get caught up in
their own press clippings. When executives are driven by ego and
diversity agendas, while disregarding unequivocal facts, that retailer
is destined to fall. Understanding your external environment, your
competitors and changing trends are essential to long-term success.
These executives forget that Montgomery Ward and K-Mart were once
premier retailers. The accumulation of bad strategic decisions by
management will eventually bankrupt even the best retail concept.
Bad decisions by retail executives destroy the lives of long-time
employees when they are forced to close stores and fire staff. I’ve
dealt with executives who couldn’t spell strategic let alone think
strategically. The retailers listed below have either collapsed
or scaled back in the last year. The worrisome fact is that the
decline in retail spending has only just begun.
Bankrupt Retailer |
# of Stores Closed |
Retailer Closing Stores |
# of Stores Closed |
Ritz Camera |
800 |
Ann Taylor |
117 |
Fortunoff |
20 |
Wilson Leather |
160 |
Circuit City |
700 |
Pier 1 |
25 |
Goody's |
218 |
Pep Boys |
31 |
KB Toys |
356 |
The Gap |
85 |
Tweeter |
70 |
Office Depot |
126 |
Mattress Discounters |
91 |
Home Depot |
15 |
Steve & Barry's |
173 |
Macy's |
11 |
Value City |
113 |
Fashion Bug |
100 |
Linens 'N Things |
371 |
Dillards |
26 |
Mervyns |
149 |
Lane Bryant |
40 |
Sharper Image |
184 |
Zales |
105 |
Wickes Furniture |
38 |
Disney |
98 |
Levitz |
76 |
Footlocker |
140 |
Bombay Co. |
384 |
Eddie Bauer |
29 |
CompUSA |
103 |
Pacific Sunwear |
154 |
Movie Gallery |
378 |
Rite Aid |
181 |
Whitehall Jewelers |
373 |
Ethan Allan |
12 |
Total Closings |
4,597 |
Total Closings |
1,455 |
A smart retail executive should be analyzing the current situation
with a critical eye. Any executive who is planning for an upturn
in spending by consumers next year is in for a rude awakening. The
environment has changed forever and if they don’t adapt immediately,
their companies will die. Based on the balance sheets and cash flows
of the retailers in the following chart, I’ve categorized them according
to their risk level. Most of the information is prior to the dreadful
holiday sales season. Balance sheets and cash flows continue to
deteriorate. Some of the retailers on this list will be a surprise.
Those with huge short-term debt obligations run the risk of not
being able to rollover that debt. Banks in the U.S. no longer lend
money they just beg the government for more capital. Many of these
retailers will not be in business five years from now. Others will
need to close hundreds of stores to survive.
Retailer |
Short-term Debt |
Long-term Debt |
Equity |
Debt/ Equity % |
6 Month Cash Flow |
Knock, Knock, Knockin on Heaven's
Door |
|
|
|
|
|
Bon-Ton |
$8 |
$1,315 |
$284 |
465.8% |
-$117 |
Rite Aid |
$42 |
$6,305 |
$1,111 |
571.3% |
-$59 |
Pier 1 |
$0 |
$184 |
$172 |
107.0% |
-$74 |
Cost Plus |
$118 |
$155 |
$155 |
176.1% |
-$57 |
Dine Equity (IHOP, Applebees) |
$15 |
$2,172 |
$43 |
5086.0% |
$79 |
Jones Apparel |
$253 |
$550 |
$1,182 |
67.9% |
$43 |
Zale's |
$0 |
$390 |
$502 |
77.7% |
-$85 |
Blockbuster |
$209 |
$645 |
$626 |
136.4% |
-$135 |
Gottschalks |
$4 |
$166 |
$92 |
184.8% |
-$34 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dead Men Walking |
|
|
|
|
|
Ruby Tuesday |
$18 |
$547 |
$398 |
142.0% |
$31 |
Saks |
$169 |
$480 |
$1,098 |
59.1% |
-$164 |
Macy's |
$1,086 |
$8,748 |
$9,690 |
101.5% |
-$211 |
Target |
$2,849 |
$17,444 |
$13,580 |
149.4% |
-$1,357 |
Dillards |
$487 |
$983 |
$2,399 |
61.3% |
-$42 |
Sears |
$2,306 |
$2,175 |
$9,870 |
45.4% |
-$647 |
Pep Boys |
$2 |
$331 |
$466 |
71.5% |
-$60 |
Charming Shoppes |
$7 |
$308 |
$577 |
54.6% |
-$8 |
AC Moore |
$13 |
$17 |
$186 |
16.1% |
-$15 |
Radio Shack |
$39 |
$733 |
$817 |
94.5% |
$53 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sick and Getting Sicker |
|
|
|
|
|
Pacific Sunwear |
$43 |
$0 |
$398 |
10.8% |
-$39 |
JC Penney |
$0 |
$3,505 |
$5,197 |
67.4% |
-$129 |
Staples |
$2,940 |
$1,150 |
$5,382 |
76.0% |
-$3,668 |
Office Depot |
$192 |
$689 |
$1,363 |
64.6% |
$82 |
Furniture Brands |
$0 |
$200 |
$809 |
24.7% |
-$39 |
Limited |
$0 |
$2,901 |
$2,199 |
131.9% |
$211 |
Kohl's |
$319 |
$2,057 |
$6,395 |
37.2% |
-$76 |
Lowes |
$1,021 |
$5,039 |
$18,055 |
33.6% |
-$40 |
Home Depot |
$1,016 |
$10,353 |
$18,396 |
61.8% |
$1,767 |
The words of George C. Scott as Patton describe how retailers and
nations sometimes have a limited amount of time on top of the world.
For over a thousand years, Roman conquerors returning from
the wars enjoyed the honor of a triumph - a tumultuous parade. In
the procession came trumpeters and musicians and strange animals
from the conquered territories, together with carts laden with treasure
and captured armaments. The conqueror rode in a triumphal chariot,
the dazed prisoners walking in chains before him. Sometimes his
children, robed in white, stood with him in the chariot, or rode
the trace horses. A slave stood behind the conqueror, holding
a golden crown, and whispering in his ear a warning: that all glory
is fleeting.
All glory is fleeting. The American conquerors have returned from
the mall wars pulling carts laden with HDTVs, iPods, Rolexes, and
other treasures. There is no more ammunition left to fight another
war. Retailers and Nations alike can experience fleeting glory.
The question is whether it is too late for lessons learned to be
implemented in time.
Join me at TheBurningPlatform.com
to debate the future of our country.
Published - April 2009
|